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Telescopes
detect far-flung galaxy The farthest
known object in the universe may have been discovered by a team of astrophysicists
using the Keck and Hubble telescopes. The object, a galaxy behind the
Abell 2218 cluster, may be so far from Earth that its light would have
left when the universe was just 750 million years old. The discovery
demonstrates again that the technique known as gravitational lensing is
a powerful tool for better understanding the origin of the universe. Via
further applications of this remarkable technique, astrophysicists may
be able to better understand the mystery of how the so-called Dark Ages
came to an end. According
to Caltech astronomer Jean-Paul Kneib, who is the lead author reporting
the discovery in a forthcoming article in the Astrophysical Journal, the
galaxy is most likely the first detected close to a redshift of 7.0, meaning
that it is rushing away from Earth at an extremely high speed due to the
expansion of the universe. The distance is so great that the galaxy’s
ultraviolet light has been stretched to the point of being observed at
infrared wavelengths. The team
first detected the new galaxy in a long exposure of the Abell 2218 cluster
taken with the Hubble Space Telescope’s Advanced Camera for Surveys.
Analysis of a sequence of Hubble images indicates a redshift of at least
6.6, but additional work with the Keck Observatory’s 10-meter telescopes
suggests that the astronomers have found an object with a redshift that
is close to 7.0. Redshift
is a measure of the factor by which the wavelength of light is stretched
by the expansion of the universe. The greater the shift, the more distant
the object and the earlier it is being seen in cosmic history. “As
we were searching for distant galaxies magnified by Abell 2218, we detected
a pair of strikingly similar images whose arrangement and color indicated
a very distant object,” said Kneib. “The existence of two
images of the same object indicated that the phenomenon of gravitational
lensing was at work.” The key to
the new discovery is the effect the Abell 2218 cluster’s gigantic
mass has on light passing by it. According to Einstein’s theory
of relativity, light is bent and can be focused in a predictable way due
to the warpage of space-time near massive objects. In this case the phenomenon
actually magnifies and produces multiple images of the same source. The
new source in Abell 2218 is magnified by a factor of 25. The role
of gravitational lensing as a useful phenomenon in cosmology was first
pointed out by the Caltech astron-omer Fritz Zwicky in 1937, who even
suggested it could be used to discover distant galaxies that would otherwise “The
galaxy we have discovered is extremely faint, and verifying its distance
has been an extraordinarily challenging adventure,” Kneib added.
“Without the magnification of 25 afforded by the foreground cluster,
this early object could simply not have been identified or studied in
any detail with presently available telescopes.” Using the
unique combination of the high resolution of Hubble and the magnification
of the cosmic lens, the researchers estimate that the galaxy is small—perhaps
measuring only 2,000 light-years across—but forming stars at an
extremely high rate. An intriguing
property of the new galaxy is the apparent lack of the typically bright
hydrogen emission seen in many distant objects. Also, its intense ultraviolet
signal is much stronger than that seen in later star-forming galaxies,
suggesting that the galaxy may be composed primarily of massive stars. “The
unusual properties of this distant source are very tantalizing because,
if verified by further study, they could represent those expected for
young stellar systems that ended the Dark Ages,” said Richard Ellis,
Steele Family Professor of Astronomy and a coauthor of the article. British astronomer
Sir Martin Rees coined the term Dark Ages to signify the period in cosmic
history when hydrogen atoms first formed but stars had not yet had the
opportunity to condense and ignite. Nobody is quite clear how long this
phase lasted, and the detailed study of the cosmic sources that brought
this period to an end is a major goal of modern cosmology. The team
plans to continue the search for additional extremely distant galaxies
by looking through other cosmic lenses in the sky. “Estimating
the abundance and characteristic properties of sources at early times
is particularly important in understanding how the Dark Ages came to an
end,” said Mike Santos, a former Caltech graduate student involved
in the discovery, and now a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of
Astronomy in Cambridge, England. “We are eager to learn more by
finding further examples, although it will no doubt be challenging.” The Caltech
team reporting on the discovery consists of Kneib, Ellis, Santos, and
Johan Richard. Kneib and Richard are also affiliated with the Observatoire
Midi-Pyrenees of Toulouse, France. The research was funded in part by
NASA. The W. M.
Keck Observatory is managed by the California Association for Research
in Astronomy, a scientific partnership between Caltech, the University
of California, and NASA. For more information, visit the observatory online
at www.keckobservatory.org.
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